Center for American Progress

A “Coverage Facts” Label for Health Insurance
Article

A “Coverage Facts” Label for Health Insurance

To improve transparency and standardize information, we suggest the development of a new information tool for health insurance consumers: a “Coverage Facts” label for health insurance policies, modeled on the Nutrition Facts label required for packaged foods.

Part of a Series

To improve transparency and standardize information, we suggest the development of a new information tool for health insurance consumers: a “Coverage Facts” label for health insurance policies, modeled on the Nutrition Facts label required for packaged foods.

A Coverage Facts label would summarize key features in a health insurance policy and illustrate how it might cover care for a given treatment scenario. The label would highlight important estimates, such as total treatment costs and the amount the patient might be expected to pay. The label could break down patient cost liability by type of service (highlighting the impact of excluded or limited benefits, for example) and by type of cost sharing (illustrating how co-pays might add up during treatment of a chronic condition).

For more on this topic, please see:

 

The positions of American Progress, and our policy experts, are independent, and the findings and conclusions presented are those of American Progress alone. A full list of supporters is available here. American Progress would like to acknowledge the many generous supporters who make our work possible.

Explore The Series

Previous
Next